Simmer Dim is a book of roots and epiphanies, of travels that become an
inward journey as the poet searches for origins familial and literary,
finally discovering what Eliot found in his Four Quartets: And the end
of all our exploration / Will be to arrive where we started / And know
the place for the first time. Though the poems take us to many
landscapes (in France, Greece, Italy, Ireland, England, Scotland, and
along the swamps and shores of Florida and Louisiana) none is more
important than Wales, with its coal pits and stony hills and resonant
ghosts. William Greenway, during a year's stay there, meets his own
history. Wales (the home of Dylan Thomas, whose influence made Greenway
a poet, and the birthplace of his Methodist minister grandfather, whose
coming to the America South led to Greenway's constricted upbringing as
the son of a Baptist preacher) provokes a radical reconsideration of a
life and love he thought he knew. It also reconfirms his hunger for
language that will reveal the world and preserve it. In poems formal and
free, Greenway speaks to us in a voice that has its own distinctive
idiom, warm and wise and hard-won, showing us what he learned from his
journeys: who he was / and where he belonged.